Reasons:
The Patriots are playing in the Super Bowl for the second straight year and the
third time in the past four seasons while the Eagles haven’t been to the Super
Bowl since 2004, when they lost to the Patriots. Not these Patriots, per se, but certainly Tom Brady and Bill Belichick.
Or should I say that the other way around? That was a close and exciting Super
Bowl, highlighted by a puking Donovan McNabb and Terrell Owens on a broken leg
for Philadelphia and a win for New England. My in-laws have never gotten over
it. Super Bowl LII should be just as exciting as both conferences’ top seed
ended up in the title game, despite the Eagles losing their MVP-candidate
quarterback Carson Wentz towards the end of the regular season. After winning
Super Bowl LI in miraculous fashion, and then having the best off-season of any
returning Super Bowl champion in the league’s history (sans losing top wide
receiver Julian Edleman in the preseason), New England entered the 2017 season
the heaviest Super Bowl favorites in Las Vegas history; the same could not be
said for Philadelphia. Despite the long odds, Carson Wentz, a top-3 running
game realized over the course of the season and a frightening defense led by
arguably the best front line defender in the NFL in Fletcher Cox helped propel
the Eagles to the Super Bowl as the best team in the NFC; in other words, the
Eagles are no Cinderella. The problem is, even Eagle fans are secretly worried
Nick Foles could turn into a pumpkin once the lights go on and the Eagles are
suddenly face-to-face with a team that has been to five Super Bowls since they
lost to these Patriots 14 years ago.

Philadelphia’s offense ended the regular season
tied for 2nd in points scored (28.6),
only 1.3 ppg from the league’s top spot; guess who they tied with? New England.
Philadelphia’s intimidating defense only gave up 18.4 ppg, good for 4th
in the NFL; New England’s ridiculed defense ranked 5th at 18.5 ppg.
If that shocks you, it shouldn’t, because the Patriots have long been known for
their “bend-don’t break” defensive mentality and most of that media coverage
came when people were shocked the Patriots were near the bottom of the league
in defense. It’s amazing what a good coach can do with game film and some time.
A more seasoned fan might point to the difference in yards allowed, where
Philadelphia ranks 7th and New England ranks 20th, but I
would counter with the fact that only 59 ypg separates the two teams and those
59 ypg could be explained away by early season miscommunications, or more
realistically, teams racking up garbage passing yards in lopsided games.

These two teams are very evenly matched, but
they don’t match up great, if that makes sense. The Patriots get after the
quarterback (7th w/ 42 sacks),
but the Eagles don’t (15th);
the Eagles are ball hawks (4th
w/ 19 INTs), but the Patriots, stacked with Pro-Bowl defensive backs, don’t
(18th). The Patriots have
the league’s top passing attack; the Eagles pass defense is ranked 17th.
The Eagles have the league’s top rushing attack; the Patriots run defense is
ranked 20th. One of the key matchups in the game will be the Eagles
top-ranked run defense against the Patriots 10th-ranked rushing
game. That matchup could largely depend on how well the Patriots defend Cox,
which will certainly be double teams and a running back chip, which is going to
leave an Eagles defender, most likely Chris Long or Brandon Graham, wide open;
that’s a problem for Patriots offensive line coach Dante Scarnecchia, who’s
going to have his hands full all game. Another key matchup will be tight end
Rob Gronkowski, fresh off the concussion protocol, against the Eagles
linebackers, some of the worst tight end defenders in the league.

The biggest mismatch in the game will be
experience. Tom Brady has more Super Bowl experience than the entire Eagles
team. The Patriots have 60 combined Super Bowl games worth of experience taking
the field Sunday; the Eagles have six. Philadelphia entered the game the
biggest underdogs in Super Bowl history, although that mark may have been bet down
over the course of two weeks. The Patriots, on the other hand, are 9-1 in the
playoffs in the past four years, have won two Super Bowls in that stretch, and
came into the season so favored it wasn’t even worth betting on them unless you
were a multi-millionaire. So what gives? That one New England loss in those
previous ten playoff games, that’s what gives. Tom Brady was pressured 24 times
in that game and they lost; therein lies the key to the Eagles winning Super
Bowl LII. Pressure Tom Brady, disrupt his timing, make him regret the timing of
his Tom v. Time documentary release, and Philadelphia wins the game. It could
be that simple. If the Patriots gain anything on the ground and open up play
action, the Eagles are dead, as I doubt Foles can keep up with a free flowing
Brady; but if they stop the Patriots run game and pressure Brady, we could see
the Brady we saw in those two Super Bowl losses against the New York Giants.
The difference here is Philadelphia has a much better offense than either of those
Giants teams, and an equally scary defense, especially if Cox, Graham and Long
get loose. The Philadelphia Eagles may have entered Super Bowl LII media week
the largest Super Bowl underdogs in the game’s history, but all the pressure is
on New England to keep their 40-year-old Golden “Boy” upright, otherwise they
have no chance. New England wins their 3rd Super Bowl in four years,
but the Eagles cover, turning the City of Brotherly Love into the City of
Patriot Hate…if it wasn’t already.

The New England Patriots provided
yet another thrilling Super Bowl last week, their second straight, and eighth
in the past 17 years, but ultimately came up short against the Philadelphia
Eagles, a city destined to burn to the ground. The Eagles, led by Super Bowl
MVP Nick Foles (28-43 for 373 yards; 3 TDs; 1 INT), completed 12 of 18 3rd-
and 4th-down conversions on offense, almost unheard of, especially
against a Bill Belichick-led defense, and made the defensive play of the game
when the moment was biggest, strip-sacking Tom Brady as Brady attempted the
go-ahead drive. Sound familiar? The Patriots managed the same type of momentous
defensive play to help seal their fate in Super Bowl LI, but that was miraculous;
this Eagles play, led by Brandon Graham and assisted by Chris Long (sound
familiar???), wasn’t miraculous, it was just incredible. I think I may have
mentioned those guys making a difference. Another major difference was that
Dante Scarnecchia vs. Fletcher Cox matchup, which Scanecchia largely won. In
fact, the Eagles defensive front didn’t really shake Tom Brady up at all (1
sack), as Brady threw for a playoff record 505 passing yards, but it was that pivotal
strip-sack that sealed the game for the Eagles. That’s all these games take
sometimes is one pivotal play; or, as in this game, it takes myriad.

Super Bowl LII provided
record-breaking combined total yards (1151) and individual performances (Tom Brady:
28-48 passing for 505 yards; 3 TDs), but also provided a game in which the
Eagles never trailed until 9:22 in the 4th quarter, when the entire
city of Philadelphia started collectively shitting themselves, despite what
they might tell you at the parade as they actually eat horse shit.
Unfortunately that’s not even trash talk, but I digress. Super Bowl LII also
provided plenty of drama and controversy, with several key injuries, several
blatant non-calls, a few controversial TDs, special teams melt downs and a
mystery about the Patriots best defensive back, Malcolm Butler, who was
mysteriously benched hours before the game despite playing a team-high 98% of
defensive snaps throughout the season. The mystery only deepened as Belichick
gave us nothing, but the media gave us theories ranging from the flu to weed to
Rick Ross. Regardless, it could be argued – very successfully – that Belichick’s
normally rigid working ways turned into foolish pride on the biggest stage in
American sports and helped cost the Patriots their record-tying 6th Super
Bowl championship.

In the end this game belonged to
Doug Pederson and the Philadelphia Eagles from beginning to end, highlighted by
Pederson’s signature aggressive play calling and 4th-down decisions,
an offensive line that kept Nick Foles upright all day, and a defense that made
the right plays at the right time. New England did what they do best, playing
from behind and nearly snatching the victory right out of the talons of
Philadelphia, but the Eagles are no Falcons, and the same guy who helped the
Patriots win Super Bowl LI helped the Eagles win Super Bowl LII, and it couldn’t
have happened to a better man (Chris Long moonlights as a social activist and
has donated his entire 2017 $9.1M salary to various social causes).

In the end this game was a
microcosm of the 2017 NFL season: The two best offenses in the NFL (OK, LA Rams
scored 1.3 ppg more than these two teams) battled, 2017 MVP Tom Brady broke
records and almost stole the victory from one of the best defenses in the NFL,
and the Patriots defense, near the bottom in yards allowed all season, gave up
a record amount of yards to the Eagles to lose the game. There’s never any
telling where Super Bowl contenders will go heading into a new season, but for
the first time since the Legion of Boom days I’m inclined to predict the same
two teams could make Super Bowl LIII in 2019, but it depends on many things:
Will Belichick retire? Will Tom Brady? Who will be the Patriots coordinators?
Just kidding, we know Josh McDaniels is coming back. <Chuckles quietly>
Will the Eagles team survive the parade? Will Philadelphia be rebuilt by next
season? If the team and city survives will pride, contract extensions, an
impending quarterback battle and/or the talk show syndicate destroy their 2018
playoff chances? We’ll answer those questions next season. Until then, enjoy
the Philadelphia Eagles fans, world. You wanted insufferable Patriots fans to disappear
and you got your wish. You know what they say…

Reasons:
The Patriots are playing in the Super Bowl for the second straight year and the
third time in the past four seasons while the Eagles haven’t been to the Super
Bowl since 2004, when they lost to the Patriots. Not these Patriots, per se, but certainly Tom Brady and Bill Belichick.
Or should I say that the other way around? That was a close and exciting Super
Bowl, highlighted by a puking Donovan McNabb and Terrell Owens on a broken leg
for Philadelphia and a win for New England. My in-laws have never gotten over
it. Super Bowl LII should be just as exciting as both conferences’ top seed
ended up in the title game, despite the Eagles losing their MVP-candidate
quarterback Carson Wentz towards the end of the regular season. After winning
Super Bowl LI in miraculous fashion, and then having the best off-season of any
returning Super Bowl champion in the league’s history (sans losing top wide
receiver Julian Edleman in the preseason), New England entered the 2017 season the
heaviest Super Bowl favorites in Las Vegas history; the same could not be said
for Philadelphia. Despite the long odds, Carson Wentz, a top-3 running game
realized over the course of the season and a frightening defense led by
arguably the best front line defender in the NFL in Fletcher Cox helped propel the
Eagles to the Super Bowl as the best team in the NFC; in other words, the
Eagles are no Cinderella. The problem is, even Eagle fans are secretly worried
Nick Foles could turn into a pumpkin once the lights go on and the Eagles are
suddenly face-to-face with a team that has been to five Super Bowls since they
lost to these Patriots 14 years ago.

The New England Patriots are playing in their 8th Super Bowl in the Bill Belichik-Tom Brady era, nearly a Super Bowl appearance every other season.

Philadelphia’s offense ended the regular season
tied for 2nd in points scored (28.6),
only 1.3 ppg from the league’s top spot; guess who they tied with? New England.
Philadelphia’s intimidating defense only gave up 18.4 ppg, good for 4th
in the NFL; New England’s ridiculed defense ranked 5th at 18.5 ppg.
If that shocks you, it shouldn’t, because the Patriots have long been known for
their “bend-don’t break” defensive mentality and most of that media coverage
came when people were shocked the Patriots were near the bottom of the league
in defense. It’s amazing what a good coach can do with game film and some time.
A more seasoned fan might point to the difference in yards allowed, where
Philadelphia ranks 7th and New England ranks 20th, but I
would counter with the fact that only 59 ypg separates the two teams and those
59 ypg could be explained away by early season miscommunications, or more
realistically, teams racking up garbage passing yards in lopsided games.

The Philadelphia Eagles defensive front is led by Fletcher Cox (91), arguably the hardest man to defend in the entire NFL.

These two teams are very evenly matched, but
they don’t match up great, if that makes sense. The Patriots get after the quarterback
(7th w/ 42 sacks), but the
Eagles don’t (15th); the
Eagles are ball hawks (4th w/
19 INTs), but the Patriots, stacked with Pro-Bowl defensive backs, don’t (18th). The Patriots have the
league’s top passing attack; the Eagles pass defense is ranked 17th.
The Eagles have the league’s top rushing attack; the Patriots run defense is
ranked 20th. One of the key matchups in the game will be the Eagles
top-ranked run defense against the Patriots 10th-ranked rushing game.
That matchup could largely depend on how well the Patriots defend Cox, which
will certainly be double teams and a running back chip, which is going to leave
an Eagles defender, most likely Chris Long or Brandon Graham, wide open; that’s
a problem for Patriots offensive line coach Dante Scarnecchia, who’s going to
have his hands full all game. Another key matchup will be tight end Rob
Gronkowski, fresh off the concussion protocol, against the Eagles linebackers,
some of the worst tight end defenders in the league.

Tom Brady has more Super Bowl experience than the entire Philadelphia Eagles team, which could be the key to game. Duh.

The biggest mismatch in the game will be
experience. Tom Brady has more Super Bowl experience than the entire Eagles
team. The Patriots have 60 combined Super Bowl games worth of experience taking
the field Sunday; the Eagles have six. Philadelphia entered the game the
biggest underdogs in Super Bowl history, although that mark may have been bet
down over the course of two weeks. The Patriots, on the other hand, are 9-1 in
the playoffs in the past four years, have won two Super Bowls in that stretch,
and came into the season so favored it wasn’t even worth betting on them unless
you were a multi-millionaire. So what gives? That one New England loss in those
previous ten playoff games, that’s what gives. Tom Brady was pressured 24 times
in that game and they lost; therein lies the key to the Eagles winning Super
Bowl LII. Pressure Tom Brady, disrupt his timing, make him regret the timing of
his Tom v. Time documentary release, and Philadelphia wins the game. It could
be that simple. If the Patriots gain anything on the ground and open up play
action, the Eagles are dead, as I doubt Foles can keep up with a free flowing
Brady; but if they stop the Patriots run game and pressure Brady, we could see
the Brady we saw in those two Super Bowl losses against the New York Giants.
The difference here is Philadelphia has a much better offense than either of
those Giants teams, and an equally scary defense, especially if Cox, Graham and
Long get loose. The Philadelphia Eagles may have entered Super Bowl LII media
week the largest Super Bowl underdogs in the game’s history, but all the
pressure is on New England to keep their 40-year-old Golden “Boy” upright,
otherwise they have no chance. New England wins their 3rd Super Bowl
in four years, but the Eagles cover, turning the City of Brotherly Love into the
City of Patriot Hate…if it wasn’t already.